Review – Trading Vincent Crow by D.C.J. Wardle

Happy Good Friday! More importantly, happy bank holiday! I’m here with another review for you…but before that, here’s a little about the book.

About the Book

Vince Crow had been party to a revelation the day before that was going to change his life forever. He was no longer one of the small town crowd that delighted in tales of vomiting into plant pots. Vince Crow was about to start living life differently.

Vince Crow had heard somewhere that you could trade a piece of useless junk on the internet and, within a year of swapping it for better and better things, get cool stuff. Crow decided that he himself was going to start off as that piece of tat, jump from one job to the next; indeed, he would trade one lifestyle for a new one, until he was finally a success. Every three months he would have to trade-up for an entirely new life – a new job, a new girl, new wheels, a new pad, newthreads – until he reached the top.The plan of comparing himself to a used item traded over the internet was of course marginally flawed, as there is a human factor to all of this which he’d overlooked. Besides, success isn’t just about work. It’s about the car, the clothes, the house, and getting the girl, so changing all of that with every new trade upwards is a lot more difficult than swapping an old stereo in the classifieds. Crow quickly learns what the price of success really is. An education he would never have got if he had gone to college…

About the Author

M

D.C.J. WARDLE is the author of humorous novels ‘Trading Vincent Crow’ and ‘Vincent Crow: Export’. In January 2013 he was author of the month on http://www.lovewriting.co.uk.

Holding post-graduate qualifications in development management as well as community water supply engineering, over the past fifteen years, he has worked in developing countries in Africa and Asia, managing emergency and development programmes.

This was a lot different than my regular reading, in a very good way. Wardle has written an incredibly colourful cast of characters, getting themselves into a variety of scrapes and hi-jinks. Vincent himself is a likeable character, on his quest of self discovery. And a quest it is, with all the ups and downs you’d associate with a quest. I very much look forward to reading the follow up!

Giveaway

2 COPIES OF THE BOOK – UK winners receive a paperback and international winners an e-copy